This Caught My Eye


In this article about spring cleaning – the hard task of getting rid of books you no longer have any intention of reading again – my eye was caught by one of the books in the picture: Robert Jordan’s A Crown of Swords.

This is a book I read recently (I’m now on it’s successor, The Path of Dagger, the eighth book in the series) and a book that I will, in time, sell to a used bookstore. The Wheel of Time series is thirteen books long and I think may have one more to go, so no, I’m not going to re-read it. Also, it’s not that well written. Jordan fails to make his sprawling cast of characters as interesting as George R. R. Martin makes his. But still I keep reading. And I will finish the series. And then probably pick up another.

I have read people blame Jordan for the recent proliferation of multi-volume series that stretch beyond even the usual trilogy and sometimes I wonder how it is that I am on the eighth book and how the author keeps finding ways to keep the story going (and he does keep it going, I’ll give him that; it may be flawed, but it never feels like he’s stretching things out just to stretch it out, but rather that the task is so large that it necessarily takes a while and he also has a good idea for how political impediments can so easily multiply and tumble down upon each other).

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – Philosophy & Fiction


The last son of the literary South is not from the South.

The last of St. Aubyn’s Patrick Melrose novels is published.

We need more philosophical novels.

Why The Death Star Was A Bad Investment


The Death Star was not an intelligent allocation of resources towards the goal of maintaining power.

Gregory Koger explains why, offers some alternative investments the Emperor could have made.

Douglas Adams


Did you know that Douglas Adams died on this day in 2001?

And do you know where your towel is? ‘Cause a cool frood always has one.

Weekend Reading – Eat Your Broccoli


Read more fiction, it’s good for you. More importantly, it’s good for society (which benefits you).

Counting the human cost of General Franco.

Where’s the bailout for creative types?

The Books Of The Future


This blog posting, A 1962 Vision of the Twenty-First Century Book Trade, made me unexpectedly nostalgic.

First off, let me acknowledge some of the prescience of those prognosticators of fifty years past. The prediction about microfilm could easily be seen as prefiguring the e-reader. And they predict modern audio books and reading on computers and one person was right on in predicting the rise of the Borders and Barnes & Noble style bookstores (though he did not predict their struggles).

But it was Mrs. Ross’ comment about books being sold in groceries, drugstores, and filling stations.

Of course, one of the big stories of the book business has been how warehouse stores like Wal-Mart have cannibalized a decent percentage of the business of bookstores by stocking a small collection of best sellers.

But I remember the circular, spinning wire racks in drugstores filled with thin paperbacks. Mostly of the Harlequin and Zane Grey type, but sometimes with some kids novels or science fiction or fantasy. You can still find a few thick romance tomes in drugstores, but I haven’t seen one of those wire racks filled with pulps in a drugstore since visiting Arkansas for my aunt’s wedding. We stopped in a drugstore (with a soda fountain counter) and there it was. The last I can remember in such a place.

I know I must have bought a few books from such racks. Though as a kid, mostly I just looked at the cover art and read the back of the book in awe.

Mrs. Ross was right, but the books in drugstores didn’t really make it to the twenty-first century.

Midweek Staff Meeting – Why Is Charles Murray Still Speaking?


Charles Murray, you are still douche. That is all.

Maybe a traditional, liberal arts education would have helped him.

Human beings worked before ‘jobs’ existed and we would work if that whole system went away.

Science fiction is global.

Farewell, Sendak


Yes, Maurice Sendak passed away.

Where the Wild Things Are was a beloved book for me when I was a child, but it was not a life changing experience and I had little desire to see how a story of a very young child experimenting with a little independence before returning to the safety of a patient mother’s arms could be turned into a two hour movie.

But yes, it is a beautiful book.

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – The Golden Age


Is poetry really in another golden age?

The man, the myth, the critic!

Was she America’s first female public intellectual?

Sunday Book Review – Here Come The Italians!


A review of a collection of 20th century Italian poetry.

All the science fiction and fantasy book reviews you could desire.

Ex nihilo nihil fit.